Why Anna Hazare failed to attract crowds this time


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New Delhi, 01 August 2012:  A year ago, nothing could go wrong for 73-year-old Anna Hazare. The antigraft crusader’s campaign attracted a groundswell from a disillusioned populace tired of corruption as a way of life.

 

The movement succeeded in building Anna into a brand that millions of Indian consumers — most of them young and social media-savvy — bought into. A year down the line, that brand is frayed at the seams.

 

The erosion of Brand Anna began sometime in December last year, when the roaring crowds seen on Ramlila Maidan in August had thinned to a bunch of diehards and hangers-on during the latest hunger strike.
From a time his movement had triggered a Woodstock like anti-establishment mood, the brand’s dazzle had significantly faded. Infighting, unclear goals and an inability to show its audience concrete achievements have all but killed the aura of this brand.

 

"Brand Anna got diluted by all the holy men and politicians who joined him for a free ride," says KV ’Pops’ Sridhar, national creative director at Leo Burnett. He reckons that India’s youth backed Hazare the man and nor his extended coterie. "The moment his coterie became stronger and more visible, the brand deteriorated," says Sridhar.

 

The cornerstone of building Brand Anna Hazare lay in the septuagenarian’s ability to attract hordes of youngsters to his anti-corruption public meetings, not just in Delhi’s Jantar Mantar and Mumbai’s Azad Maidan but across the hinterland too.

 

The movement gained steam in smaller cities driven by a flood of messages across social media such as Twitter and Facebook, the best way to reach out to a constantly connected youth. But social media is no quick fix.

 

"Social media is not a one-time initiative; it is a constant effort and clearly Hazare’s team has struggled to keep up," says Rohan Chandrashekhar, CEO of BuzzValve, a social business consultancy.

 

"Given the nature of social media, even the slightest missteps get magnified." Given this stumble and constantly shifting messaging, social media users have either become disenchanted with the movement or, worse, shifted sides. "Social media is not a self-fulfilling prophecy," says Chandrashekhar. "You have to keep the effort going and the messaging consistent."

 

Instead, the movement has gone from being proactive and hopeful to angry and reactive, pushing many youth away and hindering rather than helping the brand’s position.

 

Santosh Desai, MD and CEO Future Brands, says that when the movement was launched, Anna Hazare represented a seemingly uncontaminated figure, which bore little resemblance to the political class that people struggle to identify with. "He seemed to represent a return to simpler and more idealistic times," adds Desai.

 

However, over the last few months, that illusion has been broken somewhat as the middle class — perhaps the biggest drivers of this movement — have gotten to know him better and actually dislike several things he represents.

 

"The sense of a difference or a counterpoint has got blurred," says Desai. "A concerted campaign by the government and their own internal strife has led to a muddling of purpose and sullying of the brand that Anna Hazare originally stood for."

 

For this brand at least, too many cooks are clearly spoiling the broth. Quarrelling core team members are clearly doing more harm than good, agrees Desai. "They are loquacious and endlessly verbose ... the movement has become tedious and clarity has been lost."

 

Not everyone thinks that Anna Hazare’s cause is lost. "He is probably our best bet at getting a Jan Lokpal (an anti-corruption bill)," says Vikram Sakhuhja, CEO, South Asia at GroupM, a top media-buying agency.

 

According to him, what will be key to this brand is its longevity, and whether it can move from being a one-hit wonder to having its own enduring legacy. "The in-fighting and political connections seem to have dented his brand but, despite this, I think Hazare remains our best chance at fixing endemic corruption," adds Sakhuja .

 

What may help, he feels, is Hazare overhauling the method to reach his lofty goals. "The fast-unto-death worked like a charm the first time around, but using this onetrick pony alone may not work in the longterm ," he says.

 

 

 

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Comments on this Article
Benedict Noronha, Udupi Thu, August-2-2012, 10:58
Anna must have felt that he cannot press too far for getting results. One could not be biased when one fights for Public cause. Now the only way out is to call of fast and have a fresh look a the movement. One cannot also dictate parliament. It has got its own ways and procedures and opposition musty coopeate. Opposition behaves differently ands talks differently because they also have a tag of corruption. Hence this situation.
Benedict Noronha, Udupi Wed, August-1-2012, 4:38
Anna Hazare acts like an agent of opposition which does not like Congress. He had openly opposed or anti canvassed Congress candidates in elections in U.p. and other rlections, which shows he is against the Congress leaders. A leader of his stature must stick to principles of anti corruption and not on personalities. He appears to have hidden agenda and therefore I do not support him and his actions. Baba should not have actively involved in Anna s movement. He should have been in YOGA only. to sum up one cannot side one group of corrupt and fight for corruption. The Lokapal bill is parliament s business and not of select group of M.P.s. After a long time L.K.Advani agreed it to be so. Therefore every one knows to fight corruption and it cannot be erazed like writing in Pencil or ink by putting whtenner. Therefore Anna must mend his ways of statements and protest, which public would like to support. I do not support him but support to fight corruption, corruption of every poilitical party and person who practices corruption.
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